Henry B. Wheatley

Henry Benjamin Wheatley FSA (18381917) was a British author, editor, and indexer. His London Past and Present was described as his most important work and "the standard dictionary of London".[1]

Life

He was a posthumous son of Benjamin Wheatley, an auctioneer, and his wife Madalina; the bibliographer Benjamin Robert Wheatley was his brother, and passed on expertise.[2]

Wheatley was Assistant Secretary to Royal Society of Arts, 1879-1909; founding member (1903) and President of the Samuel Pepys Club, 1903-1910; Vice-President of the Bibliographical Society, 1908-1910, and its President 1911-1913.[3] In 1909 he was the President of the Sette of Odd Volumes, an English bibliophile dining-club.[4][5]

Works

Articles

  • "Folk-Lore Terminology". Folk-Lore Journal. 2: 340–347. 1884.
  • "Celebrated Birthplaces: Samuel Johnson at Lichfield". The Antiquary: 233–239. December 1884.
  • "Post-Restoration Quartos of Shakespeare's Plays". The Library. Third Series. 4 (15): 237–269. July 1913.

Books

As editor

References

  1. "The London Topographical Society: A brief account" by Stephen Marks in The London Topographical Record, 1980, pp. 1-10.
  2. Lee, J. D. "Wheatley, Henry Benjamin". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/38397. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  3. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2009-08-04. Retrieved 2012-08-17.
  4. "The father of British indexing: Henry Benjamin Wheatley" by J. D. Lee
  5. "Wheatley, Henry Benjamin". Who's Who, 1912: 2259.
  6. "Review: The Story of London by Henry B. Wheatley". The Saturday Review of Politics, Literature, Science and Art. 98: 369. 17 September 1904.
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